
Teacher Unveils Husband's Affair
Chapter 2
I spent the night in my car, parked two blocks from the house I'd called home for seven years. The engine had long since gone cold, but I couldn't make myself turn the key again, couldn't decide whether to drive away or go back inside.
Instead, I scrolled through my phone, pulling up old voicemails I'd saved like a pathetic hoarder of memories. I pressed play on the oldest one.
"Meadow Perry, will you marry me?" Ashton's voice, young and breathless with nervous excitement. "I know you can't answer a voicemail, but I'm practicing. I want everything to be perfect when I ask you for real. You're my everything."
My everything. I'd been his everything once.
I played another one, from our honeymoon. "Hey beautiful, I'm down at the hotel bar grabbing us champagne. I can't stop thinking about how lucky I am. How did I get so lucky? I love you, Mrs. Walker."
Mrs. Walker. The name felt like a noose now.
By dawn, my tears had dried into salt tracks on my cheeks. Something cold had settled in my chest overnight, crystallizing into a hard, sharp clarity. I started the car and drove to Ashton's company building, my hands steady on the wheel.
The parking lot was nearly empty at seven AM. I pulled into a spot with a clear view of the entrance and waited, watching the sun climb higher, watching the lot gradually fill with cars. At eight-thirty, Ashton's black Mercedes pulled in. My fingers tightened on the steering wheel.
Two minutes later, a champagne-colored Lexus glided into the spot next to his. The woman who emerged was beautiful in that polished, expensive way—designer clothes that probably cost more than my monthly salary, perfectly styled hair, heels that clicked with confidence against the pavement.
They met at the entrance. And Ashton—my husband, the man who'd barely brushed his lips against my cheek yesterday—pulled her into his arms and kissed her. Not a quick peck. A real kiss, deep and lingering, his hand sliding possessively to her lower back. They pulled apart laughing, and I watched him hold the door open for her like she was something precious.
Something worth cherishing.
I got out of my car. My legs felt disconnected from my body as I walked across the parking lot, following them inside. The elevator ride to Ashton's floor seemed to last both an eternity and a single heartbeat.
His assistant looked up, startled, as I walked past her desk.
"Mrs. Walker! Mr. Walker is in a meeting—"
I opened his office door without knocking.
They sprang apart, but slowly, lazily, like they had all the time in the world. Neither looked guilty. Just annoyed, like I was a fly buzzing around their expensive lunch.
"Meadow?" Ashton straightened his tie, which I noticed was already loosened. "What are you doing here? You're supposed to be at your little conference."
The woman—Zaniyah, it had to be—examined her manicured nails with a smirk playing at her lips. "Is this the wife? She's exactly as boring as you described, darling."
Darling. The casual endearment sliced through me.
My voice came out calmer than I'd expected, almost conversational. "How long has this been going on?"
Ashton didn't even try to deny it properly. He just sighed, like I was being tedious. "Does it matter? Zaniyah is from the Perry family—Perry Industries. She's everything you're not. Successful. Wealthy. Fertile."
That last word landed like a physical blow. All those months of his family's whispered accusations, all those pitying looks, all those cruel comments about my "barren womb"—and here he was, throwing it in my face.
Zaniyah laughed, a cruel tinkling sound that reminded me of breaking glass. "Poor thing. You can't give him children, can't give him status. What exactly can you offer a man like Ashton? Lesson plans?"
I stood there, absorbing their words like blows, watching them watch me, waiting for me to crumble. To cry. To beg.
Instead, I nodded slowly, my face settling into something I didn't recognize—something cold and unreadable. "I see. Thank you for clarifying."
I turned to leave.
"Where are you going?" Ashton called after me, frustration creeping into his voice. "We need to discuss our divorce!"
I didn't answer. I walked out with my head high, past his stammering assistant, into the elevator, through the lobby. I made it all the way to my car before the trembling started.
I gripped the steering wheel, allowed myself exactly sixty seconds. I screamed until my throat burned. Tears poured down my face, hot and bitter. Then I stopped. Checked my watch. Wiped my eyes.
I pulled out my phone and called the school. "This is Meadow Walker. I need to take a sick day." My voice was steady, professional. "Yes, I'll send the lesson plans. Thank you."
Then I opened my browser and typed: "Zaniyah Flores Perry Industries."
If they wanted war, I'd give them war. But first, I needed to know my enemy.
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